Metro

‘Prowler’ is a do-gooder

By day she’s a mild-mannered businesswoman — but by night this Brooklyn gal is a superhero!

When the sun goes down, Nicole Abramovici prowls the streets of New York in a sexy cat suit, doing good deeds as a real-life comic-book-style heroine who helps the homeless and endangered animals.

The 31-year-old Fort Greene woman calls her nocturnal persona the “Prowler” — and she’s part of a growing group of real-life heroes who don costumes to do charity work.

“I dress up because I’m part of this group called Superheroes Anonymous,” she told The Post. “The costume draws awareness to the cause, and it’s exciting and people dig it.”

Abramovici said she regularly goes out and finds homeless people around Manhattan, giving them clothes, toiletries and other items to help them survive on the street.

She said the costume puts people she approaches at ease.

“When they see me in the costume, they know I’m not going to rob them,” she said. “They know I’m doing something more lighthearted.”

She often goes out with other city “heroes” who do their personal homeless outreach in costume.

One of them is her mentor, who goes by the name “Life.”

“Prowler has always been very street savvy, so my job was to show her the ropes as a superhero,” the 27-year-old Life said in an interview with Barcroft Media. “She has been very helpful because she speaks Spanish and I don’t.”

Prowler — who co-owns a home-organizing business called Genius Organizing — said she has never gotten a bad reception.

“They laugh. They don’t care,” she told The Post. “No one is like, ‘Oh, my God! I’m so shocked.’ They’re just interested in getting stuff from us.”